ELT Syrianrefugeescrowdsourced activity book English language teaching Julie Pratten3700225

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A visiting lecturer at the University of Brighton has launched a publishing initiative to increase funds for educating Syrian children living in camps in Iraqi Kurdistan. In October 2015 Julie Pratten told us that she received a Facebook message requesting help from a logistics officer in the Domiz camp near Dohuk in Iraqi Kurdistan. She then launched a crowdfunding initiative to improve money to setup a college from the camp.


Ms Pratten said she was told the volunteers who are employed in the camp ground were so busy dealing with health problems that nobody had the capacity to really engage the kids”, she said. “They didn’t have any activities, a computer, or craft supplies, they didn’t actually have a room where they might play.”She proceeded to say that they were given permission to turn a “mobile unit, brimming with old boxes” within the camp into a classroom, which Kaniwar, and some other volunteers within the camp cleared out and filled with donated craft supplies and furniture borrowed from the local school outside the camp. The center School is given with a local English teacher, who is also a refugee. To date, the work has raised around ?3,000.When we started “The kids were queuing up outside to penetrate the classroom,” Ms Pratten continued. “We can show about 100 kids. These kids have been through a lot. Most of them have mislaid their parents for the war. Others have forfeit their friends for the sea. At this point they only should play and sing this will let you amount of fun. For Four years they’ve been in that camp along with their lives have been on hold.”The goal of the publishing initiative is to raise funds to aid the institution. ‘Now that this school is placed I am concerned about the sustainability of the project. Asking people for money is hard so I made a decision to change my strategy and order the aid of the international community of ELT Syrianrefugeescrowdsourced activity book English language teaching Julie Pratten. I drawn authors and teachers to ‘donate’ one activity each. The first publication, A-Z of Hope is a crowdsourced book of 26 activities for young learners to teenagers about the universal theme of joy and happiness. The response from authors has been overwhelming. Book 1 and two are fully subscribed and that we possess a waiting set of authors able to part of if someone else can’t submit. We've over 160 authors registered who are willing to help with future projects. The 1st book will probably be posted at eliminate April and this will be launched on the Annual IATEFL conference to get held from 13 to 16 April on the ICC in Birmingham.